THE NEW YORKER which was a planned maneuver, after Murdoch had bounced the puck off Roach's stick just as Brennan skated out of the penalty box, came as a sort of anticlimax. The rest of the game, with Detroit playing defensive hockey for no good reason that we could fathom, dwindled into a slow and hos- tile stalemate, ending with the pre- posterous fist fight between Goodfel- low and Brennan. These two took turns pummeling each other on the back while the referee was escorting them to the box for minor penalties, and thereby got major penalties in- stead. I T was, of course, an amazing crowd and an amazing indication of what professional hockey has come to mean in the Garden. In addition to the ordi- nary machines for producing hortatory noises, such as horns, whistles, rattles, and cowbells, there were drums, and even one small tuba imported by a colored spectator in the gallery . To us, the most en trancing individual per- formance-surpassing even Johnson's -was that supplied by a small man who occupied a seat next to Maxie Rosen- bloom, the prizefighter. When Rosen- bloom-who watches hockey the way he watches an opponent in the ring, with cool, supercilious concentration- rebuked him for yelling too loud, the little man stopped shouting; he con- tinued, though, to jump out of his seat and stand in the aisle, opening and shutting his mouth in desperate, angry pantomime. Rosenbloom made hIm stop this also, but the little man had one trick left and he was saving it for a crisis. In the middle of the third <',', period, when Goodfellow and Bren- nan came to blows, he yanked his coat open, pulled out a whistle which he had on a string around his neck, and blew one wild, disobedient blast. Then he put the whistle back, glanced at Rosenbloom, and quickly buttoned up his coat. -R. L. T. . Q. How should a man and wife register at a hotel? A. They should register as 1\1: r. and Mrs. John Smith. -The W orld-Telegra171. And no winking at the desk clerk either. . I was not running around any place in a purple kimono and pink slippers, as the papers asserted. I was fully clothed, ex- cept for my dress and shoes.-M endotta (Mo.) Citizen. Just a lot of fuss aboút nothing. 1 T!u- 4 to-lo-rrL j-o-1- a----YL-, s: ... .. ""'...... / '11 ,'::,: e(jG. .;;.:;: '" e^'ie ...... f:,, ._....... ._ t; . " : ë ;;.:: , ;;': r': , ,'q';;iib ' :'j .i, ', .{."',..." ,.{:i{ :* f4 :;<;,,:'}.. ' " ',,".:.::/ "} :::? -::.:. Wám' . 1 7' & I >>\ }I :; )t oz::: ;$ .... Jw :;;:: '1ì!l ..fWfiJ t:\ ' 4J; m' ,'$.;: "..'1:,. :.::: ::::::-:;.;. ..... :.::;:: . ,yf :. ::::: ::;; : ::;:;;::. " æií 4' ::.:::: :''''\ : '\;:., "' i:" . :, , ; . i: , : . , :ì , , , :: ,, ' . ; , . t\:: !::(;\ , : :"" .. , . %,. ' .)" ,:::::..... , 1l I dìJ ' .:?èY'. [l@S,I';:':;i," '; ""'''' ) ""'f........".,. :;:::::,l ,::j ' .::.:"{,:..,, . :""".I ' " V> : ;\ " T n..-o- e- l.A- \ This year there's more to a wave than lvaves. You must also have curls. . . Per- manent curls-framing the face, softening the neckline, peeping out beneath your hat. Not every lvaving method can give both permanent lvaves and indestructible curls! Eugene, alone, by the invention of Reverse-spiral Winding and the new Reverse- spiral Sachet, gives hairdressers the means to assure a profusion of permanent curls in addition to natural, rolling permanent waves. Smart hairdressers know all about these new and revolutionary improvements that insure perfect results. Any woman 1 with hair of any texture or color, may sit for a Eugene wave, serenely confident that it will be a beautiful permanent-and permanently beautiful. There's no mistaking the genuine Eugene Wave. Each Eugene Sachet (or waving wrapper) is identified by the Eugene Trade Mark figure, "The Goddess of the Wave." Look for it on each Sachet. Permit no substitutes. Remember it's your hair-you're the one to be pleased. . . Eugene, Ltd., New York and Paris.